About Me

I'm a director of Maidenhead United Football Club.
For ten seasons one of my roles at the club was to produce the match programme.
The aim of this blog was to write football related articles for publication in the match programme. In particular I like to write about the representation of football in popular culture, specifically music, film/TV and literature.
I also write about matches I attend which generally feature Maidenhead United.

Monday, 29 August 2016

On thinking about a series of programme
articles to span the season I ended up channelling Rudyard Kipling via CLR
James viz “what do they know of Maidenhead United who only Maidenhead United
know”, and helped by a subscription to the Blizzard, have decided to write twenty
five thumbnail sketches of footballing innovators who have had a lasting impact
on the global game.

I begin the series with a man who
has become known as not just someone with a lasting influence on modern
football, but is also described as the “father of modern sport”, Charles W
Alcock. This is fair comment given he had a hand in the first FA Cup, the first
football international, the creation of cricket’s county championship and the
first test match between England and Australia which of course in time became
The Ashes. He was not just an administrator but a player and tactician of a
note years before the concept of the manager coach became an established role.

Born in Sunderland in 1842, he moved
to Chingford at an early age, being educated at Harrow, the famous footballing
public school. Eschewing the family shipbroking business he became a sports
reporter and looked to carry on his playing career as a centre forward by
forming The Wanderers in 1862, a club created for Harrow old boys. A year later
the Football Association was created with Alcock joining the committee in 1866,
publishing the first ever football annual two years later. He was appointed FA Secretary
in 1870, making his mark by organising the first international match between England
and Scotland in March of that year, captaining England at Kennington Oval in a
1-1 draw against the Scots.

This was the first of five games
leading up to what FIFA have since recognised as the first official
international which was played at the West of Scotland cricket ground in Partick,
Glasgow in November 1872, the earlier matches being discounted as the Scotland
team were all London based and selected by the English FA!

In the meantime in 1871 Alcock
proposed:

'That it is desirable
that a Challenge Cup should be established in connection with the
Association, for which all clubs belonging to the Association should be invited
to compete'

Based on Alcock’s experience of
inter-house knockout football at Harrow, this turned into the world’s first
national football tournament, the FA Cup, with Maidenhead and Marlow two of the
fifteen clubs which entered the first competition. Alcock went onto captain The
Wanderers to victory in the first ever FA Cup Final, beating Royal Engineers
1-0. Following retirement, Alcock refereed the 1875 and 1879 finals.

Alcock was as much an organiser on
the pitch as off it. Having become in 1866 the first player to be penalised
under the new offside law, he went onto become a leading advocate of the
“combination” (i.e. passing) game which advocated teamwork especially defence
linking with attack. This had been developed by the Sheffield club formed in
1857 and reflected Alcock’s lack of class prejudice. Unlike many of his former
school mates who sought to denigrate the status of professional clubs like
Sheffield from the north who favoured team work, in favour of individualistic
amateur clubs who saw football as self-expression with players taking it in
turns to make solo runs, Alcock argued that professionalism in sport was not a
problem, rather that shamateurism or in his words “veiled professionalism is
the evil to be repressed”.

Alcock continued as FA Secretary
until 1895, combining the role with that of secretary of Surrey County Cricket
Club. It was in this latter role that he organised the first England v
Australia test match in the northern hemisphere in 1880 and formalised the
County Championship in 1890.

The FA Cup, international football
and professionalism, the first two suggested by Alcock and the latter strongly
supported by him in the face of wholesale opposition from his peers, prove him
most surely to be a man who made modern football.

Saturday, 13 August 2016

The irresistible rise in the importance of the role of women in football, has to date been largely reflected by their participation in the game. This is understandable given it was only in 1971 that the FA lifted their ban on women's matches being played at any affiliated club, a jealous measure originally introduced in the face of crowds of over 50,000 being drawn to watch Dick Kerr's Ladies team in the 1920s.

The lifting of the ban had been preceded in 1969 by the formation of the Women's FA and quickly followed by introduction of the Women's FA Cup and national team. In more recent years the astoundingly obvious move to introduce the game into schools to replace the likes of hockey has led to the current, more equitable, state of affairs with extensive media coverage.

Increased participation has naturally been reflected by a greater presence in all aspects of the game, with writers such as Amy Lawrence following the trail blazed by Julie Welch, but despite the boom in football literature a paucity exists in telling the stories of women, such as Helen 'The Bell' Turner, who have watched the game throughout it's history, in contrast to the shelves of memoirs detailing the male experience.

Fortunately, with thanks to blogger Beyond the Last Man, I found one such example, Not Art by renowned Hungarian author Peter Esterhazy. An autobiographical novel, it tell's the author's story of the relationship with his mother who is obsessed, more so than her son, with football. Unlike his preceding work, Journey to the Depths of the Eighteen Yard Line, Not Art has been translated into English by Judith Sollosy, although in line with the Hungarian language's reputation as the most complex in Europe, it is quite a difficult read as the writing jerks jazz style from the narrative to the author's present day thoughts on often unrelated topics.

The novel begins with Esterhazy talking to his mother on her death bed, where she insists on him talking her through the intricacies of the offside rule. We quickly learn though that it's the son who has spent his life as a student of the game, taught by a woman with an epicurean appreciation of the Hungarian footballing values established by the Magnificent Magyars of the 1950s.

With the help of footnotes, the novel paints a picture of life growing up in post war Hungary and its troubled status in the Soviet bloc represented by a father distanced by his relationship with the secret police and an aristocratic mother working in a factory. The latter's dominant voice is constantly projected through the prism of football, peppered with references to the likes of Jozsef Bozsik, Zoltan Czibor and of course Ferenc Puskas who we learn is known ubiquitously in his homeland as Junior.

The joy of the novel is perfectly captured in the retelling of a family anecdote where mother comes across teenagers Puskas and Bozsik playing with a rag ball on a patch of wasteland next to a factory. Spotting the poor state of the ball she insists the boys turn around whilst she whips off her stockings to refashion it, thus demonstrating her absolute commitment to the game which would be rewarded when the boys became prominent members of one of the greatest national teams the game has ever seen.